Many traders who are just entering the crypto space have made the same mistake — opening trading software and impulsively placing orders. Watching the candlesticks constantly fluctuate, afraid of missing the market by a second delay, often results in accumulating losses.
I used to do the same. I had no idea what waiting meant, and even when I forced myself to wait, I couldn't figure out what I was waiting for. Later, through extensive real trading and simulation reviews, I gradually understood the core logic of short-term trading.
The biggest taboo in short-term trading is blindly opening positions. To achieve stable profits, you must understand three things:
**First, you need to keep up with the market rhythm.** Short-term relies on real-time price fluctuations, focusing on 1-minute, 5-minute, and 15-minute chart trends. No need to look at daily or monthly long-term trend charts.
**Second, tools are not about quantity but quality.** Many people pile up dozens of indicators, which actually causes confusion. In fact, paying attention only to candlestick patterns, moving averages, and volume is enough to identify entry signals.
**Third, buy and sell decisively.** Lock in profit targets at $3-$8, and cut losses immediately if they exceed $1-$3. The biggest fear in short-term trading is "I'll wait a bit longer," which often turns short-term trades into medium-term, and medium-term into deep losses.
Choosing the right trading session is also crucial. The London open period is the most volatile and is the golden time to trade. But avoid the 5 minutes before major data releases — events like Non-Farm Payrolls and CPI can cause spreads to widen and slippage to increase.
Don’t forget to look at the overall trend on the 1-hour chart when doing short-term trading. Even if you're only trading on the 5-minute chart, if the EMA is upward, consider only going long; otherwise, stay on the sidelines or consider shorting. Trading against the trend is the fastest way to lose money.
Another point many overlook: **Never overtrade.** Limit your daily trades to within 5 transactions, and spend the remaining 80% of the time in flat position, observing the market. It may sound boring, but this is the real way to make money.
The reality is that the success rate for short-term trading is usually between 55%-65%, which may seem low. But as long as the risk-reward ratio stays above 1.5:1, you can accumulate significant profits over time. It’s recommended that everyone test their strategies on a demo account first, and only switch to real trading after achieving consistent profits.
Short-term trading is like dancing on the edge of a knife; discipline is the only armor.
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FlashLoanKing
· 10h ago
Oh wow, that's right but also too idealistic. How many people can truly hold within 5 transactions?
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PerpetualLonger
· 13h ago
Sounds good, but you still have to go all-in to break even.
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PortfolioAlert
· 13h ago
Really, at first I was also someone who impulsively traded, but only after losing so much that I doubted life did I understand what "less is more" means.
Holding a position in cash and observing during that 80% of the time is the real gold; enduring boredom is how you make money.
Blindly opening positions is just giving money to the exchange, no problem.
Short-term trading is like this: discipline > technology. If you can't stick to discipline, don't bother messing around.
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BitcoinDaddy
· 13h ago
The core is waiting. At first, I was also someone who couldn't resist clicking.
Many traders who are just entering the crypto space have made the same mistake — opening trading software and impulsively placing orders. Watching the candlesticks constantly fluctuate, afraid of missing the market by a second delay, often results in accumulating losses.
I used to do the same. I had no idea what waiting meant, and even when I forced myself to wait, I couldn't figure out what I was waiting for. Later, through extensive real trading and simulation reviews, I gradually understood the core logic of short-term trading.
The biggest taboo in short-term trading is blindly opening positions. To achieve stable profits, you must understand three things:
**First, you need to keep up with the market rhythm.** Short-term relies on real-time price fluctuations, focusing on 1-minute, 5-minute, and 15-minute chart trends. No need to look at daily or monthly long-term trend charts.
**Second, tools are not about quantity but quality.** Many people pile up dozens of indicators, which actually causes confusion. In fact, paying attention only to candlestick patterns, moving averages, and volume is enough to identify entry signals.
**Third, buy and sell decisively.** Lock in profit targets at $3-$8, and cut losses immediately if they exceed $1-$3. The biggest fear in short-term trading is "I'll wait a bit longer," which often turns short-term trades into medium-term, and medium-term into deep losses.
Choosing the right trading session is also crucial. The London open period is the most volatile and is the golden time to trade. But avoid the 5 minutes before major data releases — events like Non-Farm Payrolls and CPI can cause spreads to widen and slippage to increase.
Don’t forget to look at the overall trend on the 1-hour chart when doing short-term trading. Even if you're only trading on the 5-minute chart, if the EMA is upward, consider only going long; otherwise, stay on the sidelines or consider shorting. Trading against the trend is the fastest way to lose money.
Another point many overlook: **Never overtrade.** Limit your daily trades to within 5 transactions, and spend the remaining 80% of the time in flat position, observing the market. It may sound boring, but this is the real way to make money.
The reality is that the success rate for short-term trading is usually between 55%-65%, which may seem low. But as long as the risk-reward ratio stays above 1.5:1, you can accumulate significant profits over time. It’s recommended that everyone test their strategies on a demo account first, and only switch to real trading after achieving consistent profits.
Short-term trading is like dancing on the edge of a knife; discipline is the only armor.